The Day

The robots have arrived!

(But they still need a little adult supervisio­n)

- By MATT O’BRIEN

Guess who’s getting used to working with robots in their everyday lives? The very same warehouse workers once predicted to be losing their jobs to mechanical replacemen­ts.

But doing your job side-byside with robots isn’t easy. According to their makers, the machines should take on the most mundane and physically strenuous tasks. In reality, they’re also creating new forms of stress and strain in the form of injuries and the unease of working in close quarters with mobile half-ton devices that direct themselves.

“They weigh a lot,” Amazon worker Amanda Taillon said during the pre-Christmas rush at a company warehouse in Connecticu­t. Nearby, a fleet of 6-foot-tall roving robot shelves zipped around behind a chain-link fence.

Taillon’s job is to enter a cage and tame Amazon’s wheeled warehouse robots for long enough to pick up a fallen toy or relieve a traffic jam. She straps on a light-up utility belt that works like a superhero’s force field, commanding the nearest robots to abruptly halt and the others to slow down or adjust their routes.

“When you’re out there, and you can hear them moving around, but you can’t see them, it’s like, ‘Where are they going to come from?’,” she said. “It’s a little nerve-racking at first.”

Amazon and its rivals are increasing­ly requiring warehouse employees to get used to working with robots. The company now has more than 200,000 robotic vehicles it calls “drives” that are moving goods through its delivery-fulfillmen­t centers around the U.S. That’s double the number it had last year and up from 15,000 units in 2014.

Its rivals have taken notice,

and many are adding their own robots in a race to speed up productivi­ty and bring down costs.

Without these fast-moving pods, robotic arms and other forms of warehouse automation, retailers say they wouldn’t be able to fulfill consumer demand for packages that can land on doorsteps the day after you order them online.

But while fears that robots will replace human workers haven’t come to fruition, there are growing concerns that keeping up with the pace of the latest artificial intelligen­ce technology is taking a toll on human workers’ health, safety and morale.

Human burnout

Warehouses powered by robotics and AI software are leading to human burnout by adding more work and upping the pressure on workers to speed up their performanc­e, said Beth Gutelius, who studies urban economic developmen­t at the University of Illinois at Chicago and has interviewe­d warehouse operators around the U.S.

It’s not that workers aren’t getting trained on how to work with robots safely. “The problem is it becomes very difficult to do so when the productivi­ty standards are set so high,” she said.

Much of the boom in warehouse robotics has its roots in Amazon’s $775 million purchase of Massachuse­tts startup Kiva Systems in 2012. The tech giant re-branded it as Amazon Robotics and transforme­d it into an in-house laboratory that for seven years has been designing and building Amazon’s robot armada.

Amazon’s Kiva purchase “set the tone for all the other retailers to stand up and pay attention,” said Jim Liefer, CEO of San Francisco startup Kindred AI, which makes an artificial­ly intelligen­t robotic arm that grasps and sorts items for retailers such as The Gap.

A rush of venture capital and private sector investment in warehouse robotics spiked to $1.5 billion a year in 2015 and has remained high ever since, said Rian Whitton, a robotics analyst at ABI Research.

Canadian e-commerce company Shopify spent $450 million this fall to buy Massachuse­tts-based startup 6 River Systems, which makes an autonomous cart nicknamed Chuck that can follow workers around a warehouse. Other mobile robot startups are partnering with delivery giants such as FedEx and DHL or retailers such as Walmart.

Amazon this year bought another warehouse robotics startup, Colorado-based Canvas Technology, which builds wheeled robots guided by computer vision.

The tech giant is also still rolling out new models descended from the Kiva line, including the Pegasus, a squarish vehicle with a conveyor belt on top that can be found working the early-morning shift at a warehouse in the Phoenix suburb of Goodyear, Ariz. A crisscross­ing fleet of robots carries packaged items across the floor and drops them into chutes based on the ZIP code of their final destinatio­n.

All of this is transformi­ng warehouse work in a way that the head of Amazon Robotics says can “extend human capability” by shifting people to what they are best at: problem-solving, common sense and thinking on their feet.

“The efficienci­es we gain from our associates and robotics working together harmonious­ly — what I like to call a symphony of humans and machines working together — allows us to pass along a lower cost to our customer,” said Tye Brady, Amazon Robotics’ chief technologi­st.

Brady said worker safety remains the top priority and ergonomic design is engineered into the systems at the beginning of the design stage. Gutelius, the University of Illinois researcher, said that the aspiration for symphonic human-machine operations is not always working out in practice. “It sounds quite lovely, but I rarely hear from a worker’s perspectiv­e that that’s what it feels like,” she said.

Gutelius co-authored a report published this fall that found new warehouse technology could contribute to wage stagnation, higher turnover and poorer quality work experience­s because of the way AI software can monitor and micro-manage workers’ behaviors.

A recent journalist­ic investigat­ion of injury rates at Amazon warehouses from The Center for Investigat­ive Reporting’s Reveal found that robotic warehouses reported more injuries than those without.

Reveal looked at records from 28 Amazon warehouses in 16 states and found that the overall rate of serious injuries was more than double the warehousin­g industry average. Amazon has countered it’s misleading to compare its rate with rivals because of the company’s “aggressive stance on recording injuries no matter how big or small.”

The Reveal report also found a correlatio­n between robots and safety problems, such as in Tracy, Calif., where the serious injury rate nearly quadrupled in the four years after robots were introduced.

Amazon: Workers adapting

Amazon hasn’t disclosed how its safety record at robot-powered warehouses compares to those without. But company officials remain optimistic that Amazon workers are adapting to the new technology.

At a visit with a reporter earlier in December to the warehouse in North Haven, Brady was explaining the workings of a powerful robotic arm called a “palletizer” when crates it was stacking on a pallet started tumbling over. Unfazed by the temporary malfunctio­n, he watched as an employee disabled the machine, discovered an apparent structural weakness in the pallet, adjusted the stack of crates and let the robot get back to work.

“His ability to problem-solve that was like this,” Brady said, enthusiast­ically snapping his fingers. “What I love about that is it’s humans and machines working together.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ?? An Amazon robot, above, sends a package down a chute organized by ZIP code at an Amazon warehouse facility in Goodyear, Ariz. Below, Joseph Salinas places packages onto Amazon robots. While fears that robots will replace human workers haven’t come to fruition, there are growing concerns that keeping up with the pace of the latest artificial intelligen­ce technology is taking a toll on human workers’ health, safety and morale.
PHOTOS BY ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP An Amazon robot, above, sends a package down a chute organized by ZIP code at an Amazon warehouse facility in Goodyear, Ariz. Below, Joseph Salinas places packages onto Amazon robots. While fears that robots will replace human workers haven’t come to fruition, there are growing concerns that keeping up with the pace of the latest artificial intelligen­ce technology is taking a toll on human workers’ health, safety and morale.
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 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP PHOTO ?? Robots move along the warehouse floor at an Amazon warehouse in Goodyear, Ariz.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP PHOTO Robots move along the warehouse floor at an Amazon warehouse in Goodyear, Ariz.

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